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Nutrition and reproductive performance of dairy cattle 2. Prediction of reproductive performance in first lactation dairy heifers subjected to controlled nutritional regimes
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 September 2010
Abstract
One hundred first lactation Friesian dairy heifers were used to investigate the effect of level of feeding n i late pregnancy (83·6 or 64·6 MJ metabolizable energy (ME) per head daily and around the time of first artificial insemination (AI) (weeks 6 to 18 of lactation: 146·8 or 119·8 MJ ME per head daily) on reproductive performance.
Heifers receiving the high level of feeding in lactation had a successful pregnancy rate to first AI of 0·42 compared with 0·63 for heifers receiving the lower level of feeding. Heifers receiving the higher level of feeding in late pregnancy followed by the lower level in lactation had a pregnancy rate of 0·72 o t first AI resulting in a median interval from calving to pregnancy of 75 days compared with figures of 0·35 and 95 days respectively, for heifers receiving the higher levels of feeding throughout the experiment (P < 0·001).
Blood samples were taken from all heifers 2 weeks before and on weeks 1, 5, 9, 13 and 18 after calving, and were analysed for 13 components. Of the blood components measured, only p"-hydroxy-butyrate concentrations, particularly at week 9, were affected by the nutritional treatments imposed and consistently related to fertility (P < 0·01 to P < 0·001).
Milk yield and live-weight change, individually and as the components of net energy output, showed the strongest relationships with reproductive performance (P < 0·01 to P < 0·001). The three variables which together accounted for the highest proportion (0·30) of the variation in days to successful pregnancy were net energy output at AI, (3-hydroxy-butyrate at week 9, and mean tail score in weeks 10 o t 13. These enabled the calving to successful pregnancy interval for an individual or 100 first lactation heifers to be predicted with a 95% confidence interval of ±58 days or ±8·6 days, respectively.
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- Copyright © British Society of Animal Science 1985
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